Critical reflections.A goal of this year's installment of Documenta, alongside the attempt to cast a "retrospective" glance over twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights. 2. of contemporary art, was to outline some reflections on art's relationship with the processes referred to today as "globalization globalization Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation ": not just the impulses and constraints of the market, but also the more or less conflictual encounters between cultures and symbolic systems of communication. When I was interviewed by Catherine David and Jean-Francois Chevrier Jean-François Chevrier is an art historian, art critic and exhibition curator. He lives and works in Paris. He is lecturer in the History of Contemporary Art at the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris and a contributor to the magazine Galeries Magazine. before the exhibition opened, I tried to pose the question of a "civilization of globalization," conceived as a process and possibility rather than as a statement of our current condition. Only such a problematic, it seems to me, allows one to lay the groundwork for the "new universalism Universalism Belief in the salvation of all souls. Arising as early as the time of Origen and at various points in Christian history, the concept became an organized movement in North America in the mid-18th century. " summoned by the breakdown of and crisis in traditional identities. I will not rely exclusively on theoretical arguments to determine whether what currently prevails in the world is in fact absolute individualism (either triumphant or desperate), generalized deterritorialization, the abolition of differences between real and virtual thought, or, on the contrary, whether it represents a backlash of collective identities and an increase in barriers and segregation (one must also include in the mix the development of metissages, new ethnicities or syncretic syn·cre·tism n. 1. Reconciliation or fusion of differing systems of belief, as in philosophy or religion, especially when success is partial or the result is heterogeneous. 2. identities invented every day in urban, working-class neighborhoods throughout the postnational and postcolonial world). The most interesting approaches to the issue demonstrate that these are not mutually exclusive Adj. 1. mutually exclusive - unable to be both true at the same time contradictory incompatible - not compatible; "incompatible personalities"; "incompatible colors" possibilities but are in fact the poles of a single overdetermined Overdetermined can refer to
adj. 1. Impossible to be transmitted; not communicable: an incommunicable disease. 2. , the untranslatability Untranslatability is a property of a text, or of any utterance, in one language, for which no equivalent text or utterance can be found in another language. Terms are neither exclusively translatable nor exclusively untranslatable; rather, the degree of difficulty of of cultures, whether these are organized around class, ethnicity, religion, or aesthetics. It is a world of attempts at translation, attempts that always leave something untranslated, a "remnant" - but it is this remnant that in turn constitutes the condition for the desire to communicate. Philosophy should help us reflect on this point, just as it should help us articulate our concepts of the universal with the tensions of the globalization process. The universal has both an extensional and an intensional (philosophy) intensional - A description of properties, e.g. intensional equality, that relate to how an object is implemented as opposed to extensional properties which concern only how its output depends on its input. significance. In the extensional, denotative de·no·ta·tive adj. 1. Denoting or naming; designative. 2. Specific or direct: denotative and connotative meanings. sense, the universal is what addresses all people (or the greatest possible number) in order to encompass them in a single whole and arrange them under the same "law," which in this way neutralizes or relativizes their differences (whether through common legal status, submission to the same authority, or participation in the same market). But more profoundly, the concept of the universal has an intensional, connotative significance: this is what equality (and equal freedom, equal dignity) proposes in symbolic and practical terms for all people, regardless of their differences. This intensive universality can only result from shared interests and practices. From this perspective, intensive universalism - equality, in other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke" put differently - is absolutely aligned neither on the side of globalization nor with that of resistance or the invention of communities. Intensive universalism is, in fact, suspended as a concept between these two principles, just as it was suspended - in an interminable crisis that will perhaps never be resolved - between religious and secular, civil principles. Encountering the works at Documenta and the sense of their overall arrangement allows one to probe the question of globalism glob·al·ism n. A national geopolitical policy in which the entire world is regarded as the appropriate sphere for a state's influence. glob , in all its sundry guises, with more precision. That is what I would like to do here, examining several works that were particularly striking. In a shift both material and imaginary, I will go from several images to several objects. One of the themes present throughout the history of photography is that of representing the human species. This theme is traditionally sustained by the question of the species' unity and its diversity, and it is haunted by the problem of whether such unity may be represented or instituted in ways that do not entail genocide and ethnocide Ethnocide is a concept related to genocide. Primarily, the term, close to cultural genocide, is used to describe the destruction of a culture of a people, as opposed to the people themselves. It may involve a linguicide, phenomenons of acculturation, etc. . The photographic series (or, in Gerhard Richter's synchronic syn·chron·ic adj. 1. Synchronous. 2. Of or relating to the study of phenomena, such as linguistic features, or of events of a particular time, without reference to their historical context. conceit, the photographic "atlas") in this Documenta evoke such ethical questions, but they do so through a prism constituted by the strange reversibility of time, or its functioning in reverse, which involves the current ambivalence of the relationship between nature and culture. In the context of Lothar Baumgarten's photographic series and montages, we know that the Indians of the Amazon, whose history the artist recounts in the great tradition of ethnological eth·nol·o·gy n. 1. The science that analyzes and compares human cultures, as in social structure, language, religion, and technology; cultural anthropology. 2. inquiry, are "true Indians." And yet in a way they are as fictional as the various objects - feathers, landscapes, women's legs - that elsewhere in Baumgarten's work form an atlas of the fragments and margins of the civilized world. It is because these Indians have not really been discovered but recaptured, like time itself, on the basis of a familial and social myth. A curious feeling of optimism emanates from this "recapturing," as though they were not destined des·tine tr.v. des·tined, des·tin·ing, des·tines 1. To determine beforehand; preordain: a foolish scheme destined to fail; a film destined to become a classic. 2. for annihilation but somehow strengthened by an ineradicable in·e·rad·i·ca·ble adj. Incapable of being eradicated. in e·rad capacity for survival. They come after the institution that implied their death. In a completely different register, Hans-Jurgen Syberberg's "Platonic" Cave of Memory videos examine Germany, the "belated nation," through the lens of science fiction. We penetrate the cerebral machine of a subject that, based on all appearances, will never be consoled. Here the young are old and the old are young, or the living dead and the dead living. In Syberberg's very different montages, there is no longer anything but culture, a culture that, however, is threatening to disintegrate. Inversely, Marc Pataut's photographs, taken at the construction site of the future French national stadium in Plaine Saint-Denis before the expulsion of the squatters and the beginning of the great excavations, document a fallow fallow a pale cream, light fawn, or pale yellow coat color in dogs. , postindustrial post·in·dus·tri·al adj. Of or relating to a period in the development of an economy or nation in which the relative importance of manufacturing lessens and that of services, information, and research grows. Adj. 1. landscape, an intermediary site between two historical sequences of heavy construction, one typical of economic modernity (large factories), the other emblematic of postmodernity (as a site for the mass spectacle of the World Cup). Pataut's photographs show nature after culture; they set the meeting of historical cultures, which now takes place in the margins of urbanization, to the rhythm of demolition and rebuilding, a rhythm that has become "second nature" to humanity. While Robert Adams Robert Adams or the diminutive, Bob Adams, may refer to: Athletes
After the institution, after culture, in what Pasolini called the dopo-storia, the "poststory" or the story "after the fact": these various phenomena - ruins or second nature, degeneracy Degeneracy (quantum mechanics) A term referring to the fact that two or more stationary states of the same quantum-mechanical system may have the same energy even though their wave functions are not the same. or renewal - are all no doubt a part of globalization's imaginary, which forms the reverse of communication-oriented machines, the megalopolises of Rem Koolhaas. These are all fundamental anthropological assessments accessible through art. But they cannot by themselves address the question of whether there exists a global culture, or under what conditions one could exist, or how we emerge from the type of "global culture" that is behind us and is pursuing us like our shadow. For such a problematic requires that features and modes of subjectivization also be brought into play. Here again, several pieces are germane ger·mane adj. Being both pertinent and fitting. See Synonyms at relevant. [Middle English germain, having the same parents, closely connected; see german2. : Lygia Clark's masks, "sensorial sensorial /sen·so·ri·al/ (sen-sor´e-al) pertaining to the sensorium. sen·so·ri·al adj. Of or relating to sensations or sensory impressions. " costumes, and various "experimental" instruments; Christine and Irene Hohenbuchler's toys, furniture, and albums; and Thomas Schutte's architectural Liebesnest ("love nest"). With these examples culled from the exhibition we are at another level in the description of what makes up the human species: that of subconscious boundaries allowing one to define what is "proper" to the species, or which features delineate behavioral normality. Clark's work figures the sacred boundary (we used to call it "taboo") represented by anthropophagy an·thro·poph·a·gus n. pl. an·thro·poph·a·gi A person who eats human flesh; a cannibal. [Latin anthr (it seems, in fact, that man is the only species to ritualize rit·u·al·ize v. rit·u·al·ized, rit·u·al·iz·ing, rit·u·al·iz·es v.tr. 1. To make a ritual of. 2. To force a ritual on. v.intr. To engage in ritualism. autophagy autophagy /au·toph·a·gy/ (aw-tof´ah-je) 1. lysosomal digestion of a cell's own cytoplasmic material. 2. autophagia. autophagy 1. lysosomal digestion of a cell's own cytoplasmic material. 2. , and it would be difficult to understand all the determinations of human sexuality without reference to this boundary, as well as to the "prohibition" of incest - which as we know only exists through its transgression). Christine and Irene Hohenbuchler's hybrid objects realized in collaboration with artists in clinical institutions highlight the boundary of rationality at the problematic point where childhood and madness meet, that is, the point at which one may ask why what is normal at a certain age is pathological at another. Finally, Thomas Schutte's drawings of housing-projects-cumbirdhouses suggest the unrepresentable boundary separating the animal and the human in the representation of love, fidelity, and coupling. Among other things, these comparisons indicate that such "boundaries" (the taboo of anthropophagy, the lack of distinction between childhood and madness, the animality of sexual and romantic behavior) are, of course relative. They are not perceived, experienced, codified cod·i·fy tr.v. cod·i·fied, cod·i·fy·ing, cod·i·fies 1. To reduce to a code: codify laws. 2. To arrange or systematize. , or sacralized in the same way by all "cultures," even within the so-called developed or civilized world. I say sacralized, for the dimension of symbolic law is exhibited here as such, but in a secular fashion, in the proximity that exists between rites and gestures, ideality i·de·al·i·ty n. pl. i·de·al·i·ties 1. The state or quality of being ideal. 2. Existence in idea only. Noun 1. and materiality. Such rites, gestures, and so on register a half century of anthropological knowledge, the effect of which has been to demonstrate that it is necessary to go beyond the image of the arbitrary and the incommunicability of cultures, an image profoundly linked to what Edward Said called orientalism and in a more general way to imperialism. Cultures are different, they are absolutely singular, but they are not incommunicable in·com·mu·ni·ca·ble adj. 1. Impossible to be transmitted; not communicable: an incommunicable disease. 2. . However, their communicability communicability transmissibility; ability to spread from infected to susceptible hosts. communicability period the time during which the patient is infectious to others. or translatability is not established on an explicit, constructed level of the collective imaginary, such as those of institutions or narratives. It is established virtually, on the level of the most fundamental invariants of subjectivity: play, death, illness, reason and madness, the role of the sense of touch and that of discourse in sexuality, and so on. One should of course be careful with the word "invariant (programming) invariant - A rule, such as the ordering of an ordered list or heap, that applies throughout the life of a data structure or procedure. Each change to the data structure must maintain the correctness of the invariant. ," since what is at issue here are not immutable IMMUTABLE. What cannot be removed, what is unchangeable. The laws of God being perfect, are immutable, but no human law can be so considered. rules (like a "code of nature") but choices and trials imposed on all humanity that different "cultures" make operative in different ways. It is this variation that the art here allows one to grasp. By isolating a particular trait and the "distinctive features" of a civilization, by exacerbating, theatricalizing, or transporting it to a slightly different context from the one where we normally see it, the human becomes identifiable, but always by means of a distancing effect. What is the connection between this form of recognition and globalization, or a global culture? I see at least two. The first is that globalism in the sense of a universal circulation of capacities for innovation or criticism, or of the properly artistic dimension of the culture, does not exist without the rise of art to the differential features of human civilization - that is, it is through the artistic medium and practice that we can uncover these differential features (of which anthropology gives an abstract concept, but which is as much aesthetic as scientific). This diversity of human symbolic structures, through the potency of the prohibition and exclusion it harbors, is explored in the imaginary by all identity-related movements. The discourse surrounding the organization and legitimization of global communications utterly ignores such diversity, as it does the subjective dimension in general - outside of a few shoddy mystics (of the New Age sort) who proliferate on the margins. On the other hand, as soon as the circulation of information is also conceived as a generalization of aesthetic experiences that force humanity to confront its own limits, its function will change completely. I suspect that part of the stakes of the organization of a global market in art lies here. But there is a second connection, which I call the emergence of a new "pensee sauvage," the term Levi-Strauss used to refer to methods of classification of the daily world that depend on the valorization val·or·ize tr.v. val·or·ized, val·or·iz·ing, val·or·iz·es 1. To establish and maintain the price of (a commodity) by governmental action. 2. of the singular object traditionally associated with mythical thought. Levi-Strauss forged this concept to criticize the (Sartrean) idea of dialectical reasoning and, more generally, the notion that there should be an opposition between scientific forms of rationality and folk methods of classification. It would not be difficult to locate in Levi-Strauss' concept, among other things, a heritage of Surrealism but without the postromantic pathos. What I will say, then, is simply this: global culture, or rather, global civilization, the global process of civilizing, if it exists and insofar in·so·far adv. To such an extent. Adv. 1. insofar - to the degree or extent that; "insofar as it can be ascertained, the horse lung is comparable to that of man"; "so far as it is reasonably practical he should practice as it exists, is obviously not "irrational," but it is inseparable from the emergence of the new form or new conception of rationality. This pensee sauvage is not the form of thought associated with small groups, each with its own language, style, techniques, social "organization," system of classification, myths, etc.; it is the pensee sauvage of the great open space, indeed, of hyperspace hyperspace - /hi:'per-spays/ A memory location that is *far* away from where the program counter should be pointing, often inaccessible because it is not even mapped in. (Compare jump off into never-never land. , where a single logic operates (even if we know that it is in reality split into all sorts of isolates and isolationist i·so·la·tion·ism n. A national policy of abstaining from political or economic relations with other countries. i tendencies, which can be violent). But in either case, this logic is "classificatory," or "differential," that is, an attempt to organize the same and the other, to compare symbolic systems. It is therefore always on the border, the boundary, between violent exclusion and the exchange of experiences. Art reveals this boundary, this violence and this possibility of exchange. In doing so, it potentially constructs a space of circulation, not for information but for objects, objects that become, in Levi-Strauss' words, "good to think." Provided, of course, it does become civilized ... RELATED ARTICLE: ETIENNE BALIBAR What is global? What is political? These are two questions the curators of Documenta X thought we should ask, and thought should be asked in relation to one another. Enlisted as part of this endeavor (beth in an interview in Documenta X: The Book and as a speaker in the "100 Guests, 100 Days" events) was Etienne Balibar, distinguished professor of philosophy at Paris-X University, who first became known in the mid '60s through his collaborative efforts with Louis Althusser. In his consideration of these questions occasioned by the works on view at Documenta, Balibar makes several observations. First there is a notion of temps mort, or "dead time," a historical moment of the sort in which new, imperceptible, unpredictable things may happen (rather like the time that Benjamin Buchloh, in his contribution to Documenta X: The Book, sees in James Coleman's work but finds lacking in Jeff Wall's photographic return to "the painting of modern life"). For Balibar this temps mort is a time of "translation" that cuts across the unities of culture and asks us to complicate the notion of "fictive fic·tive adj. 1. Of, relating to, or able to engage in imaginative invention. 2. Of, relating to, or being fiction; fictional. 3. Not genuine; sham. ethnicity" through which the very idea of a culture has been tied to the nation-state. Through this rethinking comes a first connection to the global: we need to rethink the universal-particular opposition, and in place of cultural differences look at the violence of irreconcilable ways of "civilizing." Such are the issues Balibar thinks are presented, for example, by the "new ethnicities" that have grown up in our "global cities." But there is also another sense of "global," another kind of globalization discourse. It is not an anthropological discourse about identity and culture, but one of corporations, governments, and journalists. It concerns not only circulation (e.g., "glocal" marketing strategies) but also production - work and work space and the sorts of skills required to "compete" (e.g., Silicon Alley). In this discourse "globalization" has come to refer to a model of development or modernization, which one must adopt on pain of losing out, and which, politically speaking, translates as a (new) crisis in the management of the welfare state - or in what Balibar prefers to call the "national social state." For a basic concern in his work has been to rethink politics after the notion of the national social state. He thinks we need to reconceive "citizenship" (which has traditionally been defined in terms of the nation-state) and "the cosmopolitan" (which, e.g., in its Kantian mode stays within the national horizon), as well as the geopolitical ge·o·pol·i·tics n. (used with a sing. verb) 1. The study of the relationship among politics and geography, demography, and economics, especially with respect to the foreign policy of a nation. 2. a. borders that the nation-state has drawn at once within and without us, overdetermined first by colonialism and then by cold war. Thus, one might speak today of an "omnipolitan" condition that cuts across the old European world of "the great nations," a condition that, along with new patterns of immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important. and human-rights politics, calls for new styles of thinking and intervention. Between the anthropological and corporativist senses of "the global," there are no doubt many connections, some of which have begun to surface in art and art talk. For example, there is the biotechnopia often promoted by enthusiasts of the new technologies and typified by Wired, which combines with-it theories of complexity and free-market corporativism in a "digital revolution." Balibar takes another tack. In both the culturalist and economist debates, his problem is to conceive the political in new ways. He thinks we need to invent a new kind of politics, different from (though linked to) the politics of "enlightenment" and of "social transformation"; the questions of "civility" and "civilization" that he sees in the violence and the translation in the work at Documenta X form part of his attempt to articulate this politics. The global and the political thus come to be connected in a particular way. It is a matter of a reinvention of politics - one might say, of the time of that reinvention. - John Rajchman |
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